There’s a real cinematic presence to be felt across these missions too, with Medal of Honor: Above and Beyond embracing the player in its storytelling. The campaign sees players travelling across Europe as they complete a multitude of missions, with the player certainly finding themselves in the heart of the action at all times.
![medal of honor above and beyond medal of honor above and beyond](https://images.lindependant.fr/api/v1/images/view/5d8ce8028fe56f15c02cf275/large/image.jpg)
It was the campaign that I was most excited to get stuck into though, especially since the Oculus Quest catalogue is a little bare when it comes to cinematic shooters. Medal of Honor: Above and Beyond features both a meaty single player campaign and multiplayer modes to play through, so there’s something to satisfy whatever first-person shooting itch you might have. Check out a gallery of screenshots down below: Was it worth the wait? I think so, even if it’s clear that some sacrifices were made to make it work. Well, we might have had to wait close to a year, but the first-person shooter is now available on the Oculus Quest 2, giving gamers the chance to immerse themselves in the brutality of World War II in both single and multiplayer action on the stand-alone headset.
#Medal of honor above and beyond Pc#
I’m an Oculus Quest 2 owner who doesn’t have a fancy PC to play so I just had to skip it, which was a real shame.
![medal of honor above and beyond medal of honor above and beyond](https://gamestracker.org/_ld/92/67623063.jpg)
![medal of honor above and beyond medal of honor above and beyond](https://new-game-plus.fr/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/Medal-of-Honor-above-and-beyond-campagne-solo-1536x791.jpg)
When Medal of Honor: Above and Beyond launched exclusively on PC-based virtual reality headsets late last year, I couldn’t help but to feel a little bit envious – especially since it was heralded as one of the biggest titles coming from Oculus Studios.